Los Angeles Times

Pricing drugs by value is recipe for ripoffs

- DAVID LAZARUS

Heather Bresch, chief executive of pharmaceut­ical heavyweigh­t Mylan, testified before lawmakers Wednesday that her company acted ethically and fairly when it jacked up the price of lifesaving EpiPens by more than 500%.

While saying she was troubled “that the EpiPen product has become a source of controvers­y,” Bresch told skeptical members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform that “price and access exist in a balance, and we believe we have struck that balance.”

That’s a bold stance considerin­g that each $300 EpiPen contains about a dollar’s worth of epinephrin­e and Mylan didn’t even invent the plastic injector that delivers the drug. It purchased rights to manufactur­e and sell EpiPens in 2007 as part of a $6.6-billion acquisitio­n of Merck’s generic-drug operations.

At the time of the merger, people were able to buy EpiPens for about $50 each. Mylan now sells EpiPens in packs of two for more than $600.

It’s easy to assume that greed is solely to blame for runaway drug prices — and companies like Mylan do nothing to challenge that perception.

The reality, however, is more complicate­d.

When Bresch talked about drug prices and access existing “in a balance,” she was referring to what the pharmaceut­ical industry calls value-based pricing.

This is what you get when you price a drug not

just commensura­te with its research and developmen­t, production and marketing, but also reflecting the drug’s importance to patients. And that’s a very slippery concept.

What a pharmaceut­ical company is basically saying with value-based pricing is that a patient’s life would be a whole lot worse without their drug, so that should be worth something, right? Maybe a big something.

“There are a lot of moral and ethical issues that come up when you talk about value-based pricing of drugs,” said Robert L. Stein, a professor of pharmacy law and ethics at Claremont’s Keck Graduate Institute.

“Most other consumer products are discretion­ary or there are alternativ­e sources,” he said. “When you talk about pharmaceut­icals, especially newer pharmaceut­icals, there aren’t a lot of options.”

The poster child in this regard is Gilead’s hepatitis C drug Sovaldi, which carried a list price of about $1,000 a pill when it was introduced in 2014. A second-generation version of the drug, Harvoni, cost more than $1,100 a pill. The latest version, Epclusa, sells for closer to $900 a pill.

These are astonishin­g numbers. But Gilead’s drugs effectivel­y cure patients of hepatitis C, so who’s to say they’re not worth every penny? More than 3 million Americans are estimated to have hepatitis C.

“We believe the price of Harvoni reflects the value of the medicine,” Gilead said in a 2014 statement defending its pricing. “Unlike longterm or indefinite treatments for other chronic diseases, Harvoni offers a cure at a price that will significan­tly reduce hepatitis C treatment costs now and deliver significan­t health care savings to the health care system over the long term.”

That’s one way of looking at it. Another is that Gilead justifies its crazy-high prices by arguing that because it would be more expensive to treat hepatitis on an ongoing basis, they can charge whatever they please as long as it’s less than that amount. This is a problem. “Value is one thing, but another considerat­ion is whether society can afford that value,” said Gerard Anderson, a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins University. “If you charge more than people can afford, people die.”

He compared lifesaving prescripti­on meds to water.

“If a water company charged the value of water, they could charge whatever they like, an infinite amount,” Anderson said. “We couldn’t exist without water. That’s why we don’t allow the water company to charge the value of water.”

It’s a tricky business. There’s almost no limit to the value of a drug to someone who’s sick. So with value-based pricing, the door is wide open to abusing patients.

At the same time, we’re all better off if drug companies are financiall­y motivated to do the costly research and developmen­t necessary to innovate and come up with new cures and treatments.

Stein at the Keck Graduate Institute said the only way to deal with the problem might be to approach every drug on a case-bycase basis, rather than imposing price caps across the entire industry.

“When is a drug price unconscion­able?” he said. “It’s like Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart said about pornograph­y: You know it when you see it.”

Jason Doctor, director of health informatic­s at USC’s Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, said Mylan’s Bresch crossed that line when she raised the price of EpiPens more than a dozen times since 2008.

“She operated from an oversimpli­fied model that did not account for the value people place on protecting children from harm,” he said. “This is a treasured societal norm. When the price she set for EpiPens violated that norm, people got angry, even though the price was legal.”

Bresch made nearly $19 million last year. She told lawmakers that this was “in the middle” of what drugindust­ry CEOs make.

On the other hand, most other top-tier pharmaceut­ical CEOs haven’t been subjected to sitting before lawmakers as their company is pilloried for being “sickening,” “disgusting” and showing “blatant disrespect” for the needs of families.

Bresch seems decidedly overvalued.

 ?? Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? MYLAN CEO Heather Bresch, center, takes a break Wednesday as she testifies at the House Oversight Committee hearing on EpiPen price increases.
Alex Brandon Associated Press MYLAN CEO Heather Bresch, center, takes a break Wednesday as she testifies at the House Oversight Committee hearing on EpiPen price increases.
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